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Politics

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Selected Political Writings: The Great Moving Right Show and Other Essays

Edited by Bill Schwarz (NHC Fellow, 2015–16), Stuart Hall, David Featherstone, Michael Rustin, and Sally Davison Selected Political Writings gathers Stuart Hall's best-known and most important essays that directly engage with political issues. Written between 1957 and 2011 and appearing in publications such as New Left Review and Marxism Today, these twenty essays span the whole of Hall's career, … Continued

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Yemen Chronicle: An Anthropology of War and Mediation

By Steven C. Caton (NHC Fellow, 1992–93) In 1979, Steven C. Caton went to a remote area of Yemen to do fieldwork on the famous oral poetry of its tribes. The recent hostage crisis in Iran made life perilous for a young American in the Middle East; worse, he was soon embroiled in a dangerous … Continued

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Capital Affairs: London and the Making of the Permissive Society

By Frank Mort (NHC Fellow, 2001–02) A series of spectacular scandals profoundly disturbed London life during the 1950s in ways that had major national consequences. High and low society collided in a city of social and sexual extremes. Patrician men-about-town, young independent women, go-ahead entrepreneurs, Westminster politicians, queer men, and West Indian newcomers played a … Continued

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Chaucerian Polity: Absolutist Lineages and Associational Forms in England and Italy

By David Wallace (NHC Fellow, 1989–90) This study of Chaucer's poetry and prose incorporates approaches gleaned from modern Marxist historiography, gender theory, and cultural studies. It presents an articulation of Chaucerian polity through analyses of art, architecture, city and country, household space, guild and mercantile cultures, as well as literary texts. The author argues that … Continued

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The Blessed Revolution: English Politics and the Coming of War, 1621-1624

By Thomas Cogswell (NHC Fellow, 1987–88; 2003–04) This book examines the background to the English military intervention in the Thirty Years War. Blending accounts of diplomacy and factional in-fighting at Court with parliamentary and popular politics, it aims to illuminate the 'revolution' of 1624 when the Palatine crisis forced James I to abandon his long-held … Continued

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Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America

By Nancy MacLean (NHC Fellow, 2008–09; 2021–22) Behind today’s headlines of billionaires taking over our government is a secretive political establishment with long, deep, and troubling roots. The capitalist radical right has been working not simply to change who rules, but to fundamentally alter the rules of democratic governance. But billionaires did not launch this movement; a … Continued

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New England Women Writers, Secularity, and the Federalist Politics of Church and State

By Gretchen Murphy (NHC Fellow, 2018–19) Drawing on literature, correspondence, sermons, legal writing, and newspaper publishing, this book offers a new account women’s political participation and the process of religious disestablishment. Scholars have long known that eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American women wrote pious, sentimental stories, but this book uses biographical and archival methods to understand … Continued